Abstract 178: Angiogenesis is Triggered by Nutrient Deprivation via Gcn2/atf4-dependent Regulation of Vegf and H2s Production

2016 
Objective: Angiogenesis is crucial to maintain tissue homeostasis under nutrient and oxygen deprivation (ischemia). Although considerable evidence supports that angiogenesis is regulated by hypoxia-HIF1α induction of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), the role of nutrient deprivation in angiogenesis is poorly defined. Approach and Results: We report that nutrient deprivation in the form of dietary sulfur amino acid restriction (Methionine/cysteine Restriction; MR) promotes VEGF expression and functional growth of new capillaries in skeletal muscle of mice (Fig.1 A, B). This occurred independently of hypoxia or HIF1α, but instead required the amino acid-sensing eIF2α kinase GCN2 and the transcription factor ATF4 (Fig. 1C). In addition to increased VEGF, nutrient deprivation boosted production of the pro-angiogenic gas hydrogen sulfide (H2S) via increased GCN2/ATF4-dependent expression of the H2S-generating enzyme cystathionine-gamma-lyase (CGL). The genetic requirement for CGL in angiogenesis trigg...
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